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Marco Caneira

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Place of birth
  
Sintra, Portugal

Name
  
Marco Caneira

Height
  
1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)

Role
  
Footballer

Playing position
  
Defender

Position
  
Defender

1990–1997
  
Sporting CP


Marco Caneira e0365dmcom0708800x600FootballValenciaCaneira

Full name
  
Marco Antonio Simoes Caneira

Date of birth
  
(1979-02-09) 9 February 1979 (age 36)

Number
  
4 (Videoton FC / Defender)

Similar People
  
Anderson Polga, Tonel, Fernando Meira, Simon Vukcevic, Liedson

Www futebolparatodos com br marco caneira


Marco António Simões Caneira (born 9 February 1979) is a Portuguese former footballer. He played preferably as a central defender, but was equally at ease on the right or the left flank.

Contents

Marco Caneira Classify Portuguese Marco Caneira

A youth graduate at Sporting, he started his career at the club, also appearing briefly for Benfica in his country, and represented Valencia in La Liga for a couple of years before returning to Sporting. Over the course of ten seasons, he amassed Primeira Liga totals of 126 games and one goal; he retired in 2015, after a four-year stint with Videoton.

Marco Caneira Classify Portuguese Marco Caneira

Internationally, Caneira appeared for Portugal at two World Cups and earned 25 caps in six years.

Early years

Born in the village of Negrais in Sintra, Lisbon, Caneira began his career at the Sporting Clube de Portugal youth system, eventually graduating to the senior squad and making his first-team debuts while still only a junior (aged 17). After signing a professional contract, he immediately went on loan to fellow Primeira Liga club S.C. Beira-Mar.

Caneira, along with fellow Sporting players Paulo Costa and Vasco Faísca, was then involved in a somewhat complicated 2000 transfer between F.C. Alverca, who had gained 50% of their rights, and F.C. Internazionale Milano. He was immediately sent to Reggina Calcio, in a co-ownership bid. After a season he was bought back from Reggina and sent to S.L. Benfica, on a two-year-long loan.

Bordeaux / Valencia

In the 2001 summer Caneira left for another loan spell, this time with FC Girondins de Bordeaux. At the end of the campaign, the French signed him to a four-year contract.

After his second season Caneira was loaned out again, this time to Valencia CF, which had faced Bordeaux twice in the 2003–04 edition of the UEFA Champions League. The move was made permanent on 13 June 2005.

Sporting

After one-and-a-half seasons at Valencia, Caneira returned to Portugal and Sporting in January 2006, where he displayed consistent defensive performances, also scoring a rare goal against former owners Inter Milan in the following season's Champions League, in a 12 September home win (1–0). In August 2007, although he had reached an agreement for a further five-year loan with the Lions, he returned to the Quique Sánchez Flores-led team.

After appearing rarely on the second Valencia stint, Caneira returned for a third one with Sporting, for €3.5 million, signing a four-year deal on 25 June 2008. He appeared in 32 official games in his first season (21 in the league, helping his team to the second place), but fell out of favour in the following years, inclusively not being given a jersey for the 2010–11 campaign, and he left the club in June 2011.

Late career

In the very last day of the 2011 summer transfer window, 32-year-old Caneira signed with Videoton FC in Hungary, sharing teams with three compatriots, including former international teammate Paulo Sousa, who acted as the club's manager. On 25 October 2012 he scored only his fourth goal as a professional, netting from close range after a corner kick in an eventual 2–1 home win against FC Basel for the UEFA Europa League's group stage.

Caneira left the Sóstói Stadion at the end of the 2014–15 season, having contributed with only three appearances to the club's second Nemzeti Bajnokság I conquest. After one year out football, the 36-year-old came out of retirement and joined amateurs SRD Negrais in the Lisbon Football Association.

International career

A Portugal international since 2002, Caneira was selected for the squad that appeared in that year's FIFA World Cup, but did not play in the tournament held in Japan and South Korea. He made his debut on 27 March, in a 1–4 friendly loss to Finland in Porto.

Left out of the squad for UEFA Euro 2004, Caneira returned for the 2006 World Cup, playing in Portugal's last group stage match against Mexico (2–1 win).

Personal life

On 16 January 2005, Caneira's 8-month daughter was victim of sudden death, shortly before Valencia's La Liga match against CA Osasuna. The two teams finally decided on playing the game, which ended 0–0.

In October 2009, while still an active player, Caneira ran for office in the Almargem do Bispo civil parish (in his native Sintra), losing the election by 32 votes.

Club

Sporting
  • Taça de Portugal: 2006–07
  • Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira: 2008
  • Taça da Liga: Runner-up 2008–09
  • Beira-Mar
  • Taça de Portugal: 1998–99
  • Valencia
  • Copa del Rey: 2007–08
  • UEFA Super Cup: 2004
  • Videoton
  • Nemzeti Bajnokság I: 2014–15
  • Szuperkupa: 2011, 2012
  • Ligakupa: 2011–12
  • International

    Portugal Under-16
  • UEFA European Under-16 Championship: 1995
  • Orders

  • Medal of Merit, Order of the Immaculate Conception of Vila Viçosa (House of Braganza)
  • References

    Marco Caneira Wikipedia


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